HypeForType is an online font store that features 25,000+ fonts from various designers. This is their most successful landing page with us to date - and it’s still active.

The results:

So far, this landing page has generated over 40,000 emails at a conversion rate of over 45%.

And it’s only been live for a couple months! Let’s get into the reason as to why it may be doing so well.

Why it’s made the list:

It’s a simplistic squeeze page. A squeeze page is a landing page with a hyper-specific purpose, to collect a user email address - and that’s it. They’re not trying to sell anything. They’re usually equipped with some sort of free download (ie. ebook, song, sample, etc.). They are usually very simplistic, like HypeForType’s above.

They promoted it. HypeforType has over 125k fans on Facebook. They used the platform to promote their offer, as well as Twitter where they have 29k followers. They also pinned their tweet to their profile so that every time someone visited their Twitter the promotion would be the first tweet they see. I would guess that they set up ads for this landing page as well.

The value proposition. All that’s required is an email address in order to get 30 free fonts instantly. Even I converted on the deal. :)

The conversion ask. Both the email form field and the CTA button contrast well against the black background of the form.

No navigation bar. Once a visitor has made it to your landing page, your only choices is to convert or to leave the page. And they’re converting almost half of the people that come to this landing page! That’s pretty impressive.

Next we have Driscoll’s Reward Club offer. Driscoll’s is an American company that has been selling berries for over 100 years.

This landing page is asking visitors to sign up for their rewards club in order to receive their updates and a 50 cent coupon for their berries.

Here's the landing page:

The results:

Driscoll’s Rewards Club landing page has generated almost 8,000 emails at a conversion rate of approximately 40%.

Why it’s made the list:

The landing page is completely focused on conversion. Driscoll’s page is designed similarly to the above squeeze page, but it features more form fields. I’m actually impressed that a form with so many fields for the offer has a conversion rate this high! Always make sure that your offer aligns with what you’re asking from the lead.

No navigation bar. Again, this landing page has no navigation bar, which is a common theme among high-converting landing pages. It eliminates the choices the visitor can make - either convert or exit the page.

A clear headline. Driscoll’s is very clear about what you’ll get if you convert on their form. You wouldn’t even have to read the subheadline to know what they’re offering.

SkipTheDishes allows you to get food delivered to you from a range of restaurants that don’t actually deliver - so SkipTheDishes does it for them.

You order food through the SkipTheDishes website or app, and the service gets you in touch with a courier that will pick up and deliver your food to your door.

Here's SkipTheDishes' landing page:

The results:

SkipTheDishes’ landing page has generated over 7,000 emails at a conversion rate of almost 7%.

Why it made the list:

Simple ask. This is an offer appealing to anyone who likes to get their food delivered. SkipTheDishes is offering a $5 coupon off one of any of their 100+ restaurant’s delivery service in exchange for just a city and email - which is definitely a fair deal for the lead. I’ve seen $5 coupons ask for a lot more information from leads than that.

Strong headline. It’s straightforward and stands out well with the whitespace around it.

Okay, so here we have another one of Bishop T.D. Jakes’ landing pages.

I wasn’t going to include it but, as it has a completely different layout, I thought I’d point out how you don’t need a specific format to achieve great results.

Here's their landing page:

The results:

This landing page has generated over 6,000 emails for T.D. Jakes at a conversion rate of almost 50%.

Why it made the list:

Singular form field. A form with a singular field is more likely to convert than a form with more fields, that’s just how it goes. The more fields, the more intimidating it appears to the potential lead.

Succinct text There is no text on this page that doesn’t need to be here. The offer isn’t asking much from the lead (only an email address) so the information on the page doesn’t need to be heavy.

The CTA button copy. We actually use this copy on our own landing pages. We’ve find it to work a lot better than copy like “submit” or “sign up” most likely because it details the value (“free”) and because it seems more personal by including the word, “my.”

Kevin Curry’s landing page has generated over 6,500 emails at a conversion rate of approximately 35%.

Why it made the list:

The landing page is simple. There’s lots of whitespace and there aren’t any additional elements that aren’t necessary on this page.

It’s not leaky. There aren’t any distractions or leaks on this landing page. You’ll notice that all of these top landing page don’t have a navigation bar or any links to other pages - which characterizes them as not leaky. Non-leak pages have higher conversion rates because landing page visitors only have two choices - to convert or to leave the page.

The bullet-point lists are easy to consume. Paragraphs are exhausting to read. Bullet-point lists are much more inviting.

Privacy copy. It’s important to let your landing page visitors know that you respect them and their privacy. No Cheats Needed makes sure to state that, “Your personal information will never be shared with any third parties.”

Clear headline. The headline stands out well on the page and communicates the value of the offer well.

Appealing images. It’s important to use high-resolution images that are relevant to your offer. This helps visitors visualize your offer.

It has an appropriate amount of form fields. For an offer with so much going on, it’s totally acceptable to have three form fields. Again, make sure your number of form fields are aligned with whatever you are offering.

Conclusion

Hopefully these successful landing pages have inspired you to create some high-converting landing pages yourself!

Have you generated tons of leads through a recent landing page campaign? Or have you seen a crazy high conversion rate?